There was nothing notable about that morning. I woke up and got ready for my first class of the day. I heard a knock on the door and I opened it to find one of my sorority sisters standing in the hallway, asking me to turn on the news. She and I both had 9 am classes, and she knew that I never watched TV before class and also that I would be awake.
We stood there, confused. I honestly remember having no idea what she showed me. Yes, I saw two planes hit a building in New York, but at the time I had no idea why. Amy, my sorority sister, didn't offer any answers. I didn't think twice about going to class. We parted ways and I went across the street, still feeling a little shaken, but still not able to comprehend what I had seen. I didn't call my parents or Justin. I was that confused.
I went to my class to find that most of my peers seemed completely normal. They had yet to hear or see what had happened. My professor came in and announced that an act of terrorism had been committed against the United States. Just like that, the floor fell out beneath me.
I don't remember much about that class. I don't remember if it was cut short or if we talked about what was on the syllabus for the day. I remember that when I returned to my room I called my family and Justin.
I'll never forget where I was ten years ago today.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
The power of the gaucho
I was amazed at myself when I realized that I woke up at 4:50 am this morning. It was completely accidental and was the direct result of a power outage and my own inability to understand the complex way in which I have set my clock to a certain wrong time so that I will wake up early. Anyway, I woke up early. The world was mine to conquer and all was well.
Except... I still ended up arriving to work two minutes late, and approximately two hours into my work day, I discovered I was wearing the wrong pants.
This morning I thought I was putting on regular length black pants, trouser socks and dress shoes. I noticed that my pants seemed short but I decided it was obviously static cling with my trouser socks. Then I went to the bathroom and clearly I was wearing gauchos. With trouser socks. And dress shoes. At least it's raining outside.
I tried to shimmy my breeches down a bit, converting them into low rise and slightly less gauchy, but this was ineffective as I have no butt to hold up said pants. Now I feel the need to announce my fashion faux pas to anyone who cares to listen. I like to be the one to beat you to the punch line.
Except... I still ended up arriving to work two minutes late, and approximately two hours into my work day, I discovered I was wearing the wrong pants.
This morning I thought I was putting on regular length black pants, trouser socks and dress shoes. I noticed that my pants seemed short but I decided it was obviously static cling with my trouser socks. Then I went to the bathroom and clearly I was wearing gauchos. With trouser socks. And dress shoes. At least it's raining outside.
I tried to shimmy my breeches down a bit, converting them into low rise and slightly less gauchy, but this was ineffective as I have no butt to hold up said pants. Now I feel the need to announce my fashion faux pas to anyone who cares to listen. I like to be the one to beat you to the punch line.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Hoarders and the "Only Episode" Law
Around Memorial Day, I found myself sucked in to a "Hoarders" marathon on the television. It was obviously like a train wreck, but my love for the human psyche had me hooked. I was amazed and appalled by the massive amounts of, well, crap (sometimes literally) that people had in their houses.
I think I was enamored because I know I have the potential to hoard. My dad is well known for going to the store and buying three of something because it might come in handy at some point. When I was in junior high school, I kept everything -- every note anyone had ever given me, every card, everything. After I realized this could create a major problem for my organizational obsession, I started throwing things away.
But watching "Hoarders" has made me think about items that I would consider acceptable to hoard versus items that should never, ever be hoarded. I present to you my lists:
Okay to Hoard
- toilet paper
- paper towels
- deodorant
- diapers
- paper plates
- ink pens
- batteries
- living animals
- dead animals
- teeth
- perishable food items
- socks
- underwear that no longer fits
- toenails
- cats -- I know that the fall under one or two categories listed above, but I felt like they needed special recognition
So that day I had managed to randomly stumble upon "Hoarders." The only shows that I watch regularly are: The Office, Desperate Housewives, Big Brother, House and Parenthood. All other shows are shows that I may randomly find on TV when I'm bored. However, I have discovered what I will refer to as the Only Episode Law.The Only Episode Law states that "a person who views a show randomly and then happens to view that same show again randomly on a different day and different time, will inevitably wind up watching the exact same SINGULAR episode of that show they have ever watched."
This happens to me all the time. How is it that we have over 200 channels and I end up watching the same five episodes of shows? In the last two weeks, this has happened to me at least three times. The worst part of the law is that "the viewer most likely has several shows left to watch in the DVR but still chooses to watch the one horrible episode instead."
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Assigned seats, weedeater and pirates...
Someone had asked me to bring this post back and to start posting stick pictures that people have been sending me, so, here it is! Sticks at the doctor's office. I present to you eastern Kentucky sticks, complete with the "Friends of Coal" sticker. **Please note: the author actually considers herself a "Friend of Coal" but has to point out the positive correlation between the FOC sticker and sticks.

This car also sported another nifty feature -- assigned seats. Please note the names listed on the windows. I am a lover of routine. When I was in college, I always sat in the same seat. This approach here will help you make sure no one ever takes your seat in the car. Did you forget if you were the driver or the passenger? No problem with that here. Chandra is clearly the driver. She won't have to stop and hesitate before she gets in the car, wondering where to sit.
But I wonder, what happens if Chandra gets sick. Would her husband be allowed to drive her car? Would they have to scratch the name off? What if her daughter brought a friend home from school. Where would she sit?

If I were to get sticks for my car, they would look a little something like this...
I have definitely decided that I would opt for the weedeater, though the ninja or pirate options were both appealing to me. I have no clue how people make that oh-so-important final decision. Justin says that I don't weedeat enough to use the decal above. I guess I would opt for "ninja."Speaking of ninjas, err, pirates... Where does a pirate go to wash his car? The Arrrrrrr wash!
Thursday, June 10, 2010
The Root of the Problem
There once lived a little girl who loved, loved, LOVED her teeth. She enjoyed going to the dentist and didn't even mind having braces. She even thought, "Oh, how I would someday love to be an orthodontist and help make everyone's smiles oh-so-lovely! Surely this most be the most perfect job for me!"
Then one day the princess had her wisdom teeth extracted. All four. All at the same time. Did the princess mention they were all in her gums sideways? Nitrous oxide made the girl feel like she was in a very odd episode of "Mad About You" in which all of the sounds in the room worked together, quite dramatically, to set the score for the show. She drifted off to sleep only to suddenly awaken to see aliens standing in front of her, holding a bloody tooth. "You doooooooin' allllllllright?" the alien asked. The princess fell back asleep, only to have nightmares about the alien and the bloody tooth.
A short time passed and the princess needed to have a cavity filled. The bloody tooth image briefly flashed before her, only to be replaced by the thoughts of her love for the dentist. The cavity was filled, but something wasn't right.
Turns out, the princess needed a root canal. At this point, the princess is beginning to question her love for the dentist. Why, why would the dentist betray me so? During the root canal, the princess was in immense pain. The dentist, who clearly was no prince charming, developed and evil laugh and told the princess that she wasn't experiencing pain, it was only pressure. Then the dentist looked at the x-rays and realized that the princess was indeed in pain and extracted the tooth immediately.
That day the princess decided she would rather have dentures than go through that again, but the dentist refused. The princess went through one more root canal-oops-wait-extraction incident and then huffed and puffed and moved to Minnesota. In Minnesota, the dentist offered to replace the two teeth that had been pulled to which the princess replied, "Heck no. I don't want anymore teeth. Thanksomuchbye."
The princess then decided to floss and use a Sonicare toothbrush to thwart the evil ways of the dentist. She went four very long years without a cavity and then the streak sadly ended. The princess did not live happily ever after and still wants dentures.
Then one day the princess had her wisdom teeth extracted. All four. All at the same time. Did the princess mention they were all in her gums sideways? Nitrous oxide made the girl feel like she was in a very odd episode of "Mad About You" in which all of the sounds in the room worked together, quite dramatically, to set the score for the show. She drifted off to sleep only to suddenly awaken to see aliens standing in front of her, holding a bloody tooth. "You doooooooin' allllllllright?" the alien asked. The princess fell back asleep, only to have nightmares about the alien and the bloody tooth.
A short time passed and the princess needed to have a cavity filled. The bloody tooth image briefly flashed before her, only to be replaced by the thoughts of her love for the dentist. The cavity was filled, but something wasn't right.
Turns out, the princess needed a root canal. At this point, the princess is beginning to question her love for the dentist. Why, why would the dentist betray me so? During the root canal, the princess was in immense pain. The dentist, who clearly was no prince charming, developed and evil laugh and told the princess that she wasn't experiencing pain, it was only pressure. Then the dentist looked at the x-rays and realized that the princess was indeed in pain and extracted the tooth immediately.
That day the princess decided she would rather have dentures than go through that again, but the dentist refused. The princess went through one more root canal-oops-wait-extraction incident and then huffed and puffed and moved to Minnesota. In Minnesota, the dentist offered to replace the two teeth that had been pulled to which the princess replied, "Heck no. I don't want anymore teeth. Thanksomuchbye."
The princess then decided to floss and use a Sonicare toothbrush to thwart the evil ways of the dentist. She went four very long years without a cavity and then the streak sadly ended. The princess did not live happily ever after and still wants dentures.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Behind the Music....
I have decided to expand Isaac's bath time musical experience. I normally sing "Rocky Top" to him because bath time is his favorite time of the entire day, and I want him to have a positive association with "Rocky Top." Justin has caught on to this and has moved on from dirty looks to all-out threats. So recently I have attempted to sing new songs to Isaac, but I realized quickly that I don't know all of the words to any single song aside from "Rocky Top." Well, that and maybe some Meatloaf songs, but I don't really have 23 minutes to sing one of his ballads during bath time.
My solution to this problem was to purchase "150 Fun Songs for Kids" from the iTunes store.

"This is going to be amazing," I thought to myself. "That's like, half a year worth of songs!" I was convinced that this would be the best ten dollars I ever spent, and I'd be lying if I didn't tell you that the music collection paid for itself the moment Isaac heard "The Ants Go Marching..." However, the part of me that still laughs whenever I hear someone talk about Uranus got a kick out of some of the song selections.
The best of the best:
This Is the Way the Ladies Ride
Six in a Bed
Let's Play Dressup
Cockles and Mussels
Rub-a-Dub Dub, Three Men in a Tub
Ride a Cock-Horse to Banbury Cross
Weenie Man
I'm not exactly sure what some of the messages these songs are sending. Justin and I, forever trapped in our 13-year old minds, analyze the songs.
"Why doesn't old Mother Hubbard have any food? She can't even feed her poor dog."
"Jack's mom was lazy and sent him up a hill to get water and he busts his head open?"
"The bridge in London is falling down? Why wasn't it shut down by some bridge inspector?"
"Who would put a cradle up in a tree, knowing that when the wind blows the baby is going to come crashing down? Who thought that was a good idea?"
Thankfully, I don't take any issue with Isaac's favorite song about the ants. We now sing that like it's UT's fight song.
My solution to this problem was to purchase "150 Fun Songs for Kids" from the iTunes store.

"This is going to be amazing," I thought to myself. "That's like, half a year worth of songs!" I was convinced that this would be the best ten dollars I ever spent, and I'd be lying if I didn't tell you that the music collection paid for itself the moment Isaac heard "The Ants Go Marching..." However, the part of me that still laughs whenever I hear someone talk about Uranus got a kick out of some of the song selections.
The best of the best:
This Is the Way the Ladies Ride
Six in a Bed
Let's Play Dressup
Cockles and Mussels
Rub-a-Dub Dub, Three Men in a Tub
Ride a Cock-Horse to Banbury Cross
Weenie Man
I'm not exactly sure what some of the messages these songs are sending. Justin and I, forever trapped in our 13-year old minds, analyze the songs.
"Why doesn't old Mother Hubbard have any food? She can't even feed her poor dog."
"Jack's mom was lazy and sent him up a hill to get water and he busts his head open?"
"The bridge in London is falling down? Why wasn't it shut down by some bridge inspector?"
"Who would put a cradle up in a tree, knowing that when the wind blows the baby is going to come crashing down? Who thought that was a good idea?"
Thankfully, I don't take any issue with Isaac's favorite song about the ants. We now sing that like it's UT's fight song.
Friday, May 14, 2010
A Horrible Way to Go

Once upon a time there was a very scary episode of CSI. In this episode, I learned what a "furry" is. I haven't been the same since.
I'm not going to get into what a furry is... If you don't know, just embrace that and go on about your business. Just stop reading right now and check back again later.
I'm sure that not all furries are created equal, and not all are killers with, ahem, questionable social behaviors, but I am a very fearful person, so I have decided to err on the side of caution on this one.
As a result of this episode of CSI I make every attempt to avoid costumed people (with the exception of the UT mascot, Smokey.... He has to be harmless, I just know it.) I try to avoid things like the circus, parades and Chuck E. Cheese, which just has to be a hotbed of furriness.
So imagine my utter dismay when I was at a professional conference last year and lo and behold... I turn around and notice a man with a tail, TAIL, in the food court. My palms were getting sweaty and my heart was racing. Out of the corner of my eye I notice a man with no shirt but a painted mane of fur on his bare chest. Holy bananas.
I went back to the hotel to discover that a national furry convention was being hosted at the hotel across the street. How's that for irony. I then decided that I would not leave the hotel unless the building became engulfed in flames. Better safe than sorry.
So, how does one become a furry? This thought has been nagging at me. I have a cute little bear coat for my son to wear next winter, but a coworker pointed out that this may set him on the path of furriness. I couldn't bear the thought (no pun intended) that I could contribute to this. Do I dissuade him from dressing up at Halloween? Do I not let him watch the three little mice on BabyFirst TV? I don't have the answers, but I do know I am worried about putting that little hooded jacket on him for the first time.
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